Editing Talk:1438: Houston

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I think there are two take-aways from this comic. The first is the "Call Centre" experience which others have suggested. The second, embedded in the title text, is the ''inverse'' of the comic strip's appearance in that while Apollo 13 have a huge problem they require help on, Randall may be feeling guilty about having "dumbed down" or lied about the seriousness of a (possibly-employment related?) situation to his Mother when she had been worried enough to call him in the first place. The Call Centre analogy is an easy one to relate to. In the days when you could actually physically speak to an operator, they were typically so clueless about the technology or product they were meant to be trained on it was not funny. And, when the operator had had a bad day, the kind of retort that it "Sounds like you suck at stirring" often did get dished out to frustrated customers. In fact, that retort from the operator is why the theory about an operator in a "duplicate Houston" doesn't really stand up. In the general scheme of things, the receiver of a wrong number is typically polite in informing so; the sarcasm of the response in the operator in the comic indicates some kind of personal beef that just so happens to get taken out on our astronaut, a very common situation given the low wages and sub-standard working conditions that call centre operators are often subjected to.
 
I think there are two take-aways from this comic. The first is the "Call Centre" experience which others have suggested. The second, embedded in the title text, is the ''inverse'' of the comic strip's appearance in that while Apollo 13 have a huge problem they require help on, Randall may be feeling guilty about having "dumbed down" or lied about the seriousness of a (possibly-employment related?) situation to his Mother when she had been worried enough to call him in the first place. The Call Centre analogy is an easy one to relate to. In the days when you could actually physically speak to an operator, they were typically so clueless about the technology or product they were meant to be trained on it was not funny. And, when the operator had had a bad day, the kind of retort that it "Sounds like you suck at stirring" often did get dished out to frustrated customers. In fact, that retort from the operator is why the theory about an operator in a "duplicate Houston" doesn't really stand up. In the general scheme of things, the receiver of a wrong number is typically polite in informing so; the sarcasm of the response in the operator in the comic indicates some kind of personal beef that just so happens to get taken out on our astronaut, a very common situation given the low wages and sub-standard working conditions that call centre operators are often subjected to.
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[[Special:Contributions/172.71.94.182|172.71.94.182]] 09:22, 12 August 2023 (UTC)
 

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